Dear Holly:
Sorry to hear about your head, eye and back pain. Capaxone is a medication for MS. It is given to decrease the exacerbations of demyelination occuring in MS but it is not a pain medication. It must of have been MRI scans that showed the demyelinating lesions (?). MS lesions can give you parasthesias but they should not be constant over such a long period of time. I am also assuming that the MRI ruled out a possible facial nerve problem.
What I would do is visit someone who is versed in migraine variants. I would approach it from that angle. Maybe your already seeing a headache specialist, then try and speak with him or her about your pain. Hemicranial cephalgia might give one symptoms as you describe. Anyway, it sounds to me that your on too many medication and need to get out the source of the pain.
Sincerely,
CCF Neuro MD
ps
I totally agree I am on too much meds especially since they are useless.
thanks Holly.
My father had a work related head injury in March 1999 where he was knocked unconscious and came to after having been moved. He'd had a serious laceration on the back of his head and since then he's been suffering from the same severe pain, burning and pressure on the left side of his head often followed by dizziness and loss of gait. He's been to numerous doctors who seem to think that his pain is a result of an anxiety disorder. His company GP recently told me after my complaints about dad's treatment, that perhaps he should have taken more notice of the headaches etc. A radiologist's report stated that "there are a few small areas of increased signal in the deep white matter mainly on the left side consistent with some deep white matter ischemia." Currently, his treatment is efexor-xr and aropax which I thought were antidepressants/tranquilisers. Would appreciate any advice you could give.
Thanks and regards, Mirella
Lea
Thanks in advance for any help you can give.
Mary
I imagine that you have been on every type of migraine medication. I would think that you ought to see a migraine specialist who can sit down, go over all the medications you have been on, and make a decision of how to best treat your headache. It sounds like you have a transformed migraine type of headache. If you on the east coast then I would see Dr. Silberstein at Thomas Jefferson, in the midwest I would see someone at the Diamond Clinic or here at the Cleveland Clinic.
Sincerely,
CCF Neuro MD